Salim Ismail

Summary

Salim Ismail (born May 17, 1965 in Hyderabad, India) is an Indo-Canadian serial entrepreneur, angel investor, author, speaker, and technology strategist.[1] He is the Founding Executive Director of Singularity University[2] and lead author of Exponential Organizations.[3] In March 2017 he was named to the board of the XPRIZE Foundation.

Salim Ismail
Born (1965-05-17) May 17, 1965 (age 58)
Alma materUniversity of Waterloo
Occupation(s)Global Ambassador for Singularity University, co-founder of Confabb, PubSub Concepts and Angstro
Years active1989–present
WebsiteSalimismail.com

He is a serial entrepreneur having co-founded a number of tech companies (Confabb,[4] PubSub Concepts[5] and Ångströ, acquired by Google in 2010[6][7]) and led Brickhouse, Yahoo!'s internal incubator for new products.[4]

He is the lead author of international bestseller Exponential Organizations,[2] and the founder of ExO Works and OpenExO, where he serves as Chairman.

Early life edit

Ismail was born in Hyderabad, India, spent early childhood in Mumbai, and at 10, moved to Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He traveled extensively as part of the school's co-op program, working with companies such as IBM UK, Control Data and Northern Telecom.[citation needed]

Career edit

After graduating from university, Ismail worked as a software architect for CSC Europe and later as a business consultant at ITIM Associates in London. In 1999, he became the COO of New York Business Forums in New York City.[citation needed]

Startup Ventures edit

In 2001, Ismail founded the New York Grant Company [NYGC] in direct response to 9/11, where he served as its Chairman/CEO until 2005.[8] In its first year, NYGC attracted over 400 clients and delivered over $12 million of federal grants to the local economy.[citation needed]

In 2002, Ismail co-founded PubSub Concepts, which laid some of the foundation for the real-time web. The company had an ugly ending that was discussed at various PR crisis management conferences.[9]

In 2006, he co-founded Confabb.com with four others to create a centralized place to get information about conferences.[10] The company received $200k in angel funding from early investors including Dave Winer.[11][12]

Yahoo edit

In early 2007, Yahoo appointed Ismail as Vice President and Head of Brickhouse, Yahoo's internal incubator.[4] The objective of Brickhouse was to form teams to work on disruptive ideas.[13] During his tenure with Yahoo!, Ismail worked on several products and launched new products for them including WildFire, Yahoo Pipes and Fire Eagle as well as created a relationship between Yahoo! and NASA to explore various collaborative projects.

Ångströ edit

Ismail was one of the executives that left Yahoo! in the wake of the failed Microsoft bid[14] in 2008[15][16] and with his friend, Rohit Khare he cofounded Ångströ, a company that used social networks to find news about their clients, colleagues and friends.[17] The service notified users in real time and attracted the attention of Google, which ended up acquiring it in 2010.[7]

Singularity University edit

In September, 2008, NASA invited Ismail to the founding conference of Singularity University, held at NASA's Ames Research Center. In October of that year, Ismail was appointed as its founding Executive Director.[citation needed]

Singularity University's goal is to “educate, inspire and empower a new generation of leaders to apply exponential technologies to address humanity’s grand challenges.” Singularity University – whose founders hail from Google and the XPRIZE Foundation – has brought together people from more than 85 countries to apply disruptive technologies – biotechnology, artificial intelligence, and neuroscience – to more than 100 startups.[citation needed] For two years, Ismail worked with Peter Diamandis and Ray Kurzweil, along with key partners NASA, Google, Cisco, Autodesk and Genentech to build out the university, assembling its core team and faculty, establishing the curriculum and leading the first programs.[18][19] In late 2010, Ismail took on the role of Singularity University's Global Ambassador.

ExO Works edit

Ismail founded ExO Works in 2016 to lead innovation practices and introduce organizations to "exponential thinking." The ExO Movement now includes a platform and consulting teams, educational programs, books and tools to build exponential organizations.[citation needed]

OpenExO edit

In 2017, Ismail co-founded ExO Lever, later renamed OpenExO, where he acts as Chairman. The company's mission is to help organizations, institutions and people transform for the future by implementing and evolving the exponential thinking and practices. It hosts the world's leading ExO transformation ecosystem, with more than 5,000 experts.[citation needed]

Rokk3r Fuel ExO edit

Rokk3r Fuel was launched as a venture capital firm in March 2017 with the goal of investing in exponential technologies at a global level, working with founders through a tested co-building strategy. On September 20, 2017, Salim Ismail joined the firm as a General Partner.[20] With the addition to Mr. Ismail as General Partner, Rokk3r Fuel also announced that it is naming its flagship fund Rokk3r Fuel ExO, which has $150 million to fund startups using the ExO Methodology. The ExO Methodology uses specific parameters to score an entity based on its use of assets like community, big data, algorithms, and new technology into achieving performance benchmarks ten times better than its peers.[citation needed]

Public speaking edit

Ismail speaks at conferences and industry events on the topics of disruptive convergence, exponential organizations, future of entrepreneurship, future of democracy and future of education, such as TED conferences, the Noco Foundation and Ciudad de las Ideas in 2012.[citation needed]

In 2012, he participated in the debate at the Oxford Union as part of Saïd Business School's Silicon Valley Comes to Oxford 12 programme.[citation needed]

As of 2012 he holds the position of Global Ambassador for Singularity University, representing it at various conferences and industry events.[21]

Book edit

In 2011, Ismail started writing Exponential Organizations with co-authors Mike Malone and Yuri van Geest. The book was released by Diversion Books, a division of Diversion Publishing Corp., on October 14, 2014 and reached No. 1 on Amazon's “Best-Sellers in Business Management,” and was named Frost & Sullivan's “Growth, Innovation and Leadership Book of the Year.” It has been translated into more than 15 languages.[citation needed]

The book aims to provide readings with information on “why new organizations are ten times better, faster and cheaper than yours (and what to do about it)” and comes down to a simple philosophy: in business, performance is key and when it comes to performance how you organize your efforts is the key to growth.[22]

Awards and honors edit

From 2012 to 2014, Ismail was a judge for The Economist Magazine's Annual Innovation Awards.[citation needed]

In March 2017, he was elected to the board of XPRIZE.[citation needed]

Philanthropy edit

After 9/11, Ismail founded New York Grant Company [NYGC], an organization formed to help deliver grants to affected businesses in Lower Manhattan. NYGC helped deliver over 25% ($12 million) of all grants given out in the area.[10]

In 2016, he created the Fastrack Institute, a non profit organization that accelerates technology into society by finding holistic approaches to solving problems, with a focus on large urban centres. It is also a conceptual framework for the design of future governance approaches and regulatory frameworks for industries, cities and regions seeking solutions to critical problems.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ "Salim Ismail". Singularity University. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Salim Ismail: Success in the Age of the Billion-Dollar Startup". The Wall Street Journal. 2014.
  3. ^ "Home". exponentialorgs.com.
  4. ^ a b c Arrington, Michael (Mar 14, 2007). "Salim Ismail To Head Yahoo Brickhouse". Techcrunch. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  5. ^ Mossberg, Walter S. "Pubsub, Rollyo Offer Web Search Services The Big Engines Don't." The Wall Street Journal, 2 Feb 2006, B1.
  6. ^ Cain Miller, Claire (Aug 29, 2010). "Google acquires social networking startup Angstro". Reuters. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  7. ^ a b Yarow, Jay (Aug 27, 2010). "Google Acquires More Social Networking Talent, Buys Angstro". Business Insider. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  8. ^ Fried, Joseph P. (2005). "A Guide Through the Government Maze". New York Times.
  9. ^ Wyman, Bob. "The Rumors of our death are only slightly exaggerated". As I may think...
  10. ^ "Exponential Organizations".
  11. ^ Marshall, Matt (2007). "Roundup: OpenID, Rupture, Startupping, Confabb, Trulia and more". VentureBeat.
  12. ^ Hickey, Matt (2006). "Confabb: Find, Track and Review Conferences". TechCrunch.
  13. ^ McCarthy, Megan. "Silicon Valley Tool tries to cozy up to Valleywag". Gawker. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
  14. ^ Arrington, Michael (2008). "Brickhouse Head Leaves Yahoo". TechCrunch.
  15. ^ Thomas, Owen. "Yahoo fires Salim Ismail, far too late". Gawker. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
  16. ^ Thomas, Owen. "Salim Ismail, please leave the tech industry now and do not come back". Gawker. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
  17. ^ Can Miller, Claire (August 27, 2010). "Google Acquires Angstro, a Social Networking Start-Up". New York Times. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  18. ^ McDonald, Kim Chandler (3 October 2013). Innovation: How Innovators Think, Act and Change Our World. Kogan Page Publishers. ISBN 978-0749469672. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  19. ^ Rowan, David (May 6, 2013). "On the exponential curve: inside Singularity University". Wired. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  20. ^ "Rokk3r Fuel Names Noted Technologist Salim Ismail as General Partner | Rokk3r Fuel". www.rokk3rfuel.com. Retrieved 2017-09-25.
  21. ^ Hicks, Jennifer (October 12, 2013). "When A Festival Has Nothing To Do With Music". Forbes. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  22. ^ Sykes, Timothy (2016-06-22). "5 Key Books Every Entrepreneur Should Read". Entrepreneur. Retrieved 2017-08-03.

External links edit

  • Official website